MRS Meetings and Events

 

CH01.03.01 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Dissolution Enables Dolomite Crystal Growth near Ambient Conditions

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
8:30am - 8:45am

Room 442, Level 4, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Joonsoo Kim1,Yuki Kimura2,Brian Puchala1,Tomoya Yamazaki2,Udo Becker1,Wenhao Sun1

University of Michigan–Ann Arbor1,Hokkaido University2

Abstract

Joonsoo Kim1,Yuki Kimura2,Brian Puchala1,Tomoya Yamazaki2,Udo Becker1,Wenhao Sun1

University of Michigan–Ann Arbor1,Hokkaido University2
Crystals grow under supersaturated solutions. A mysterious counterexample is dolomite CaMg(CO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>, an abundant sedimentary mineral that apparently cannot grow at ambient conditions, not even under highly supersaturated solutions. Using atomistic simulations, we show that dolomite initially precipitates a cation-disordered surface, where high surface strains inhibit further crystal growth. However, mild undersaturation will preferentially dissolve these disordered regions, enabling increased order upon reprecipitation. Our simulations predict that frequent cycling of a solution between supersaturated and undersaturated can accelerate dolomite growth by up to seven orders of magnitude. We validate our theory with in situ liquid cell TEM—directly observing bulk dolomite growth under supersaturation cycles. This mechanism explains why modern dolomite is primarily found in natural environments with <i>p</i>H or salinity fluctuations. More generally, it reveals that the growth and ripening of defect-free crystals can be facilitated by deliberate periods of mild dissolution.

Keywords

crystal growth | in situ

Symposium Organizers

Liang Jin, Bioland Laboratory
Dongsheng Li, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Jan Ringnalda, FEI Company
Wenhui Wang, National University of Singapore

Symposium Support

Bronze
Gatan

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature